Tagged: Brexit

An information war is similar to a bog standard military conflict except that the weapons are much more informational in nature, with agitprop theatre, crisis actors and mass media propaganda used in the place of bombers, tanks and guns.

It seems to me that recent revelations and realisations over the treachery of those who have pretended to represent our best interests for the past 40-odd years has had the same impact, cognitively, as a Shock and Awe invasion, not least in how our government is trying to betray our democratic vote to Leave the EU. And so you’d think there’d be riots on the streets. But there is just this strange sort of silence.

The main driver of Brexit was the desire to get our hands back on the controls of the nation, which had been gradually handed over to the EU since the early 1970s. Mrs May and Co know this. But with the Russia narrative failing in the United States and, in fact, mirroring dangerously back on Trump’s accusers, the government here is now all hands-to-the-pump in a desperate bid to prevent the defeat of the globalist One World Order.

So we’re being told that the referendum outcome was influenced by 416 tweets from “Russian bots”. Even if it were true, 416 tweets constitutes a mere nano-drop in the social media ocean for what you’d need to change hearts and minds on any scale.

But if it wasn’t the Russians, why did the British turn out in droves to vote for Brexit on 23rd June 2016?

There is some new research out about the voter demographic divide in the EU referendum on June 23rd that casts a new light on what we’ve been told, so far, about who voted to leave the European Union and why.

While similar demographics apply geographically – with the divide being between the metropolitian elites in the major cities and the rest of the country – there is a different story when it comes to voting intentions by age and class.

This article is in response to the BBC’s documentary Brexit: The Battle For Britain, for which the blurb said: “Laura Kuennesberg tells the inside story of how David Cameron’s referendum plan backfired – and how Vote Leave won.” However, while Laura did a reasonable job in examining the entrails of Will Straw’s Stronger In, and highlighting its failures, she barely touched on why the Leave camp won – and so I intend to right that here.

I think “… and how Vote Leave won.” had been tagged on as an afterthought, to give a post-hoc perception of balance. In reality, the whole programme came over like trauma therapy. It was as if by going over what ‘went wrong’ on that fateful night of 23rd June, and putting it into a nice, cosy narrative, some kind of closure could be reached by the poor old BBC which has been constantly emitting a wailing and gnashing of teeth ever since David Dimbleby’s announcement, at 4.40 am, that the results of the 1975 referendum had been overturned by the British people.

If you remember, the next scene that greeted us after such a momentous announcement was not the joyful trumpets of heralding angels or the waving of Union Jacks to the sound of Land of Hope and Glory. It was instead a practically sobbing Keith Vaz MP, wringing his hands and moaning “This is such a terrible day for the people of Britain!”.

But just like Vaz, Laura and the BBC would never be able to understand why the Leave camp won the referendum, and what a great cause for celebration it should be. This is because the thinking of us Leavers is a million miles away from their metropolitan leftie-liberal mindset. Yet it was in projecting their own way of thinking on to us – the metro-liberals’ hopes and fears – that they got it so wrong. Despite various late night phone calls to Cameron from wiser heads who were watching how the campaign was playing out across the country, Will Straw’s Stronger In campaign insisted on sticking with Project Fear. But the more of ‘the great and the good’ that they lined up to warn us about the loss of jobs and the economy crashing, the more they lost us, because they were not talking to where we were coming from.

So differently are the cognitive pigeon-holes of the metro-libs arranged, that in recent weeks, it’s been almost like having an enemy tv station in the country, blasting out the kind of bitter grief and gut-wrenching recrimination to which only that minority can relate. This kind of tragic Greek chorus might have gone down well with many of the young Millennials and Generation X who wanted to remain in the EU – but even there, they are backfiring, because today’s youngsters hardly watch television, preferring gaming and streaming from the internet. Meanwhile, the older generations are turning off in droves, and cancelling their tv licences. Why should we pay to be insulted?

There’s been a massive switch-off too, in America, where people like us are equally bored to death with the whole of the mainstream media reading from the same false script about Donald Trump and the progress of his campaign. Really, it’s the same people – the globalists – fighting against the Sovereign point of view. But they don’t seem to have learned any lessons from the mistakes of their British counterparts at Stronger In.

How Vote Leave won – or Grassroots Out, or UKIP, or Leave EU – is not really the right way to pose the question, though, because, in my experience, all of those organisations were dragging along behind a speeding train that was already moving before they tried to jump aboard. They all had a hard time trying to keep up with what was a real grassroots uprising and at its core, it was because the spirit of Sovereignty was on the rise.

Taking control

Yes, mass uncontrolled migration was a major issue – but that was just one facet of a much wider feeling of the need to take back control of our country and our own law-making functions. It was about restoring democracy to a Westminster in which the top levels of all three parties had been taken over by Eurocrats, and that is why all three political parties are in such disarray now, post-Brexit. Neither the Conservatives, Labour or the Lib Dems represent the people – the fishermen who had to burn their boats; the smaller farmers and businesses who are being swamped by regulations and red tape; those on zero-hour contracts who have to rely on food banks. The Westminster elite just represent Brussels and the globalists – and the hard core Labour voters realised this.

The bitter, accusatory line coming out of the BBC over the past six weeks has been that too many pensioners voted – seriously, they seem to believe that this is that ‘post-democratic age’ which Peter Mandelson says we’re all in. Unfortunately for you, Peter, the ‘post-democratic age’ only exists at Broadcasting House!

That’s partly why the BBC’s output in recent weeks has been mainly about the selfish old people destroying the futures of the young, and as Nick Clegg put it, in the BBC documentary:

“Yes, it was a democratic vote, but we must not ignore the fact that this was a referendum in which older voters overwhelmed the stated preferences of what young people in this country want.”

As usual, though, Clegg was spinning the truth. The young would not have been quite so ‘overwhelmed’ if more of them had taken part in the referendum and actually stated their preference. In other words, their preference was not stated, when they had the chance to state it. On 23rd June, only around 36 per cent of 18-24 year-olds managed to tear themselves away from their X-Boxes to vote.

A second referendum

However, what many of these ‘overwhelmed’ Millennials who are calling for a second referendum don’t realise is that this was the second referendum. We were the younger generation in that first referendum, in 1975, and so we remember what we were promised, and what we voted for.

And yet we’re not quite old enough to have lost our memories and all our marbles – and looking around us at what the European Union has become, we realise how we have all been conned and lied to.

Four decades later, we can now see what’s happening right across Europe, with Third World migrants flooding in and rape and murder on the streets now almost a daily news story. There are also rising unemployment rates – far higher than ours – and big mega banks, like Deutsche Bank, are on the verge of collapse.

You might wonder whether we should have stayed in the EU, to help … and that might have made some sense, if only the other member states would have listened to us. Britain has been the third largest donor to the EU project and yet, over that time, our influence in the decision-making citadels of power in Brussels has eroded to such a point that in the last 70 votes taken at the European Council, Britain was out-voted on all of them.

In other words, the people who voted in the 1975 referendum – aka the ‘selfish pensioners’ – have a more zoomed-out view of the situation. In the end, we realised that we were the grown-ups now, and so we had to make the right decision for those young people, even if they do now hate us, and for their children, and their children’s children and so on. Most of us felt so strongly about it that we were prepared to go to our graves with our children still being angry at us, knowing that at least we’d rest easy, content that we’d done the right thing by them.

“Verging on racism”

But I thought the best bit of the documentary was when Laura Kuennesberg asked Nigel Farage whether he now regretted using that now famous/infamous Breaking Point poster of “refugees” which she said that many felt was “verging on racism.”

“Verging on racism”. I remember being accused of that many times during the campaign. Not actually a racist – but almost a racist, or on the verge. What does that mean? Surely one is either racist or not? You can’t be verging on pregnant. Well, I did finally figure it out – and this cartoon explains it perfectly.

In other words, the term ‘almost racist’ or ‘verging on racism’ refers to the other cognitive buttons next to the ‘call him a racist’ button – like rational thought, hard data and facts – which would be more helpful in resolving the issue if only the person had the brainpower to engage at that level. But to hide this ignorance, so many metro-libs have been programmed by their tellies, like Pavlov’s dogs, to instantly hit the red ‘call him a racist’ button at the first sign of any talk about migration, to close down the discussion.

Nigel Farage, however, did have access to his other cognitve buttons, and so he answered Laura Kuennesberg as follows,

“By ‘refugees’, do you mean ‘economic migrants’ … as many of them were?” he parried, reframing the false trope back into the truth zone.

According to EU Stats, more than 80 per cent of those flooding into Europe last year, from various parts of Africa, were not refugees, but economic migrants. And many of them, rather than claim asylum in the first country that they came to – which is what a refugee is supposed to do – would rather undergo great discomfort and privations at Calais, in the hope of being able, eventually, to sneak aboard a lorry and come across the Channel on a ferry to the country with the highest minimum wage in Europe.

“The EU has failed us all, is what that poster says,” Farage went on, firmly. “I do think what Mrs Merkel did last year has been catastrophic to the European Union.

“Ultimately, this referendum was won by people saying we have got to get control back of our borders and a saner, better immigration system, into Britain.”

It’s about Sovereignty

It was about taking back control, but on every level – self empowerment, in other words, and not being dependent for our success or otherwise, as a nation, upon faceless and unaccountable Eurocrats. This is how the spirit of Sovereignty manifests on the material plane, along with the courage to take back one’s power.

However, none of the lessons of why the Leavers won the EU referendum have been learned by the globalist mainstream media here. Equally so in America, where as much as they lie about Donald Trump, the more followers pack into the huge stadia he has to hire for his rallies, with thousands waiting outside, around the block. The globalists’ candidate, Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, can barely fill a town hall.

There is a saying, though, that one shouldn’t interrupt one’s enemy when he is making a mistake … and so that’s probably enuf said … for now!

Reclaiming Sovereignty

Shamanic Earth Magic

When the people of Britain voted to leave the European Union in June 2016, the word on everyone’s lips was Sovereignty.

But what is Sovereignty?

There were some who tried to convince the British people that Sovereignty didn’t really exist, or that if it did, it was over-rated. A few self-styled experts claimed that Sovereignty could be extended or pooled; others insisted that Sovereignty was merely “the ability to get things done.”

All of those pundits were wrong – although they were hardly to blame for their errors. Sovereignty actually starts off life as a spiritual transmission from the spirits of the land, but this is no longer taught to the general populace.

However, a few mystic types did know about Sovereignty, and so they weren’t at all surprised when its spirit rose up from the land on the Summer Solstice of 2016, and infused the hearts and minds of the ordinary people of Britain.

In this book, Reclaiming Sovereignty, you will learn all about the spiritual source of Sovereignty – and how to find it and reclaim it in your own life and on your own land.

On 23rd June 2016, the British people up and down the land voted resoundingly to leave the European Union. If this vote had been counted as if it had been a General Election, it wouldn’t just have been 17 million-plus in favour of leaving; two-thirds of constituencies voted overwhelmingly to Leave. And they did so, in such vast numbers, not solely because of out-of-control immigration, nor because they were swayed by a big bright number on a shiny red bus. The majority voted for Brexit in order to claim their country back from foreign domination. They did it to reclaim their Sovereignty from those who, if they don’t actually seek to drive us over the cliffs like Gabriel Oak’s poor sheep in Far From the Madding Crowd, are driving our race in that direction. Continue reading →

There is a tide in the affairs of men … and sometimes there is a flood!

The political parties of this country have not represented the people for a long time – possibly decades. They have just been different flavours of the EU ice cream – Brussels Lite, Brussels Vanilla and Brussels Tutti Frutti. So the effect of our vote to Leave the EU on 23rd June was the equivalent of chucking a bowling ball at a row of skittles – and they are all now falling over in a pandemonium of constitutional crises and votes of no confidence.

It can make you feel quite dizzy, especially if you’d assumed that all you had to do was to put a cross in a box, and we would be out of the EU. Continue reading →

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